The Practical Astronomer Comprising illustrations of light and colours--practical descriptions of all kinds of telescopes--the use of the equatorial-transit--circular, and other astronomical instruments, a particular account of the Earl of Rosse's large telescopes, and other topics connected with astronomy

CHAPTER II.

Chapter 15149 wordsPublic domain

ON THE EQUATORIAL TELESCOPE, OR PORTABLE OBSERVATORY.

History of equatorials--Description of one of the simplest construction of these instruments--To adjust the equatorial for observation--To adjust the line of sight--Description of the _nonius_--To find the meridian line by one observation--Manner of observing stars and planets in the day-time

_page_ 453-464.

OBSERVATIONS, BY THE AUTHOR, ON THE FIXED STARS AND PLANETS, MADE IN THE DAY-TIME, BY THE EQUATORIAL.

Object of these observations--stars of the first and second magnitudes--General deductions from these observations

_page_ 464-469.

OBSERVATIONS ON THE PLANETS IN THE DAY-TIME.

Series of observations on _Venus_, when near the sun--Seen at the time of her superior conjunction in 1843--Conclusions deduced from these observations--phenomena observed during these observations--Remarkable phenomenon during an eclipse of the sun

_page_ 469-480.

OBSERVATIONS ON JUPITER AND OTHER PLANETS.

General conclusions, &c.

_page_ 480-485.

UTILITY OF CELESTIAL DAY OBSERVATIONS.

_page_ 485-491.

ON THE ASTRONOMICAL QUADRANT.

_page_ 492-496.

THE ASTRONOMICAL CIRCLE.

_page_ 496-502.

THE TRANSIT INSTRUMENT.

_page_ 502-505.